Transcript Reading

Reading
Reading and Phonics in the
Foundation Stage
What Is Good Reading?
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Basic reading requires the reader to share
the words that the author has chosen to use
in the text.
 Good reading is understanding what the
author and illustrator are trying to convey.
 Good reading is improved when the reader
brings experiences to the text and gains
understanding from the text.
 Excellent reading requires the reader to use a
wide combination of skills including phonics,
word recognition, grammatical understanding
and comprehension.
Session 1: First Steps
Building a good foundation for reading,
enjoying stories, handling books,
understanding that print holds meaning.
 Working out the words, ‘What does it
say?’
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– Phonics
– Word recognition
– Grammatical awareness
Session 2: Comprehension
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Responding to the text
– Who?
– What?
– Where?
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Developing a deeper understanding
– Why?
– How?
– What will happen next?
– Empathise with characters.
How is reading taught in school?
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Guided reading (Reading in group)
Shared reading (Working with the teacher as
a whole class on a single ‘big book’)
Teacher reading to the class
Paired reading (Reading with another child)
Some individual reading
Phonics work (Letters and sounds and Jolly
Phonics)
Learning tricky words on sight (Included in
the reading diary)
Reading with your child
Reading with your child should be done on a
daily basis and recorded in their reading diary.
Reading with your child should involve a
mixture of discussion and decoding the print, if
print is used.
Reading should be a pleasant time for the
parent and child and should last up to twenty
minutes.
We ask you to read 4 times a week and to
record this in your child’s diary. If there are 4
entries then your child will receive a raffle ticket
and will be entered into our weekly reading
raffle.
Picture Books and Pre-Reading
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Picture books are texts that rely heavily on the
pictures for understanding of the text, if indeed text is
present at all.
Picture books give children the opportunity to
succeed at handling and using books, they help your
child to understand how stories are organised and
are super starting points for discussion.
Parents are encouraged to help their child to make
up stories to fit the pictures and discuss what is
happening on each page.
Reading to your child is very important at this stage
to allow them to understand that words tell stories
too.
Learning through phonics
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Phonics is simply the study of the sounds that
individual letters and groups of letters make
Through the understanding of phonics
children can sound out words
Children will be given a limited number of
books to read independently at this stage
Our system relies heavily on the ‘Jolly
Phonics’ approach (See Jolly Phonics leaflet)
At this stage games are used to promote
phonological awareness and daily letters and
sounds teaching
Using Phonics
cat
stuck
goat
Early Reading
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Early reading is the stage at which your child
can link letters to sounds and blend these
sounds to read the print in picture books.
 At this stage it is important that children
practice blending sounds to build up and
sound out words.
 Your child will begin to recognise some words
on sight that they can not blend, these are
called high frequency or tricky words
 Now that your child is confident in making the
pictures into stories they can start to use
pictures to make informed guesses about
unknown words.
Tricky Words

Many of the tricky words that your child will
encounter when reading can be found listed
as ‘high frequency words’ in your child’s
reading diary.
 When your child is familiar with the sounds
presented in Jolly Phonics they will be ready
to learn these tricky words.
 Tricky words should be practiced daily once
your child reaches this early reading stage.
Reading Scheme
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Your child will become involved in a guided reading group
once we feel they are ready to access this, depending on
their age and stage of development.
 In class we will be using our Guided Reading Set books,
which include Dandelion Launchers. These will not be
sent home as they are a focus in class, but we will send
games home connected to the book, so that the letter
sound can be focussed upon. You can keep these games
at home and record how your child played the game in
their reading diary.
 An additional book, which could be an Oxford Reading
Tree book will be sent home with the children on a Friday.
Book Banding: A Better Approach
Book banding is a nationally recognised approach to
grouping books according to the reading skills that
children require to read them. It incorporates books
from many publishers, schemes and genres, including
‘real books’, allowing children to read a variety of
different types of books at the same ability level.
Sometimes these bands require books to be grouped
differently to the way in which the publishers intended
them to be. Therefore your child will be unlikely to read
Oxford Reading Tree books in the order outlined at the
back of the book, indeed they may read books that span
stages but that require the same reading skills to read
and understand.
Comprehension
Once your child has started to read
words it is easy to forget about sharing
and discussing the stories, instead
children begin focusing on words.
Please continue to pay attention to
discussing the story and questioning
your child, these are essential and
important reading skills.